Human rights in European Courts - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 33
About This Presentation
Title:

Human rights in European Courts

Description:

Title: PowerPoint Presentation Last modified by: Barbara Havelkova Created Date: 1/1/1601 12:00:00 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:136
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 34
Provided by: pravoUni
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Human rights in European Courts


1
Human rights in European Courts
  • Barbara Havelková
  • Dubrovnik 2010

2
Content
  • Human rights before European Courts
  • Human rights before the CJ EU
  • Relationship between CJ EU and ECtHR
  • Human rights before more courts?
  • Regional-EU (Bosphorus)
  • National-international (Solange I and II)
  • EU-international (Kadi)

3
Court of Justice
  • How do human rights cases arise (who can be in
    breach)?
  • Challenges to EU action
  • Challenges to MSs action

4
Challenges to EU action
  • Legislation (Nold, Bosphorus mostly
    unsuccessful but Kadi)
  • Administrative acts
  • Institutions as an employer
  • Commission as competition authority (Hoechst)

5
Challenges to MSs action
  • Implementation or enforcement of EU law (MSs as
    agents)
  • Regulation (Wachauf)
  • Directive (Lindqvist)
  • Action within the scope of EU law (ERT,
    Familiapress, Carpenter)
  • Its not ever expanding - there were rulings that
    issues fell outside the scope (Kremzow, Vajnai)

6
Court of Justice 2
  • As what can they serve?
  • Standard of review of EU or MSs action (Kadi,
    Internationale Handelsgesellschaft, ERT)
  • Justification of action otherwise in breach of
    freedoms of movement (Schmidberger, Omega)
  • Basis interpretive guidance and beyond
    (Johnston, Mangold)
  • Competence?
  • Opinion 2/94 Charter Art. 51(2)

7
Lisbon
  • Art. 51 The provision of this Charter are
    addressed to the MSs only when implementing
    Union law
  • Does that mean drafters wanted to limit to scope
    of review?
  • Would you?
  • Explanatory memorandum

8
EU Council of Europe
  • Accession
  • Opinion 2/94
  • Lisbon Art. 6(2) TEU
  • Why is it still desirable?
  • Bias toward market rights
  • The CJ should concentrate on EU stuff
  • The CJ is too deferential to MSs
  • Possibility of conflict between the courts
  • Direct review of EU acts

9
EU Council of Europe
  • Can the ECtHR currently review EUs acts?
  • Respondent?
  • Matthews, Emesa Sugar, Bosphorus (one MS)
  • Senator Lines (all MSs)
  • Types?
  • Room for implementation single state (Matthews)
  • No discretion (Bosphorus)
  • An EU level act directly (Senator Lines, Emesa
    Sugar)

10
Strasbourg-Luxembourg
  • Possible jurisdictional overlaps?
  • Sionaidh Douglas-Scott A tale of Two Courts
    Luxembourg, Strasbourg and the Growing European
    Human Rights Acquis (2006) 43 CMLRev 629
  • Strasbourg decides cases involving violations of
    the ECHR by Member States, in which there is no
    EU law component (no problem)
  • The CJ decides cases involving breaches of human
    rights by EU institutions (this might give an
    applicant a remedy they wouldnt otherwise have
    Kadi)
  • The CJ decides cases involving breaches by Member
    States when implementing or within the scope EU
    law (overlap ERT)
  • Strasbourg jurisdiction over actions involving
    the EU (Matthews,Bosphorus,)

11
Strasbourg on Luxembourg
  • Rare
  • Mainly deferential (discrimination in pensions,
    borrowing definitions of public service,
    procedural)
  • Sometimes less so
  • Sometimes it does not comment or avoids decision
    (issue of business premises and the right to
    privacy the right to comment on AGs opinion in
    Emesa Sugar)

12
Luxembourg on Strasbourg
  • Chronologically (first AGs then CJ)
  • Citations of ECHR
  • Citations of ECtHRs case law (FamiliaPress,
    Carpenter, Akrich, Pupino)
  • Mostly to the benefit of the applicant
  • Deference following rather than just refering
  • Sometimes after adjustments business premises
    self-incrimination
  • CJ Hoechst and Orkem
  • ECtHR Niemietz and Funke
  • CJ Roquette Frere

13
Conclusions
  • Transnational judicial dialogue about human
    rights
  • Inchoate borrowings (lack of comparative law
    methodology lack of doctrine of the status of
    ECtHR case-law before the CJEU)
  • Do we want a final arbiter?
  • An example of legal pluralism
  • Contemplation - collective deliberation produces
    better solutions than single
  • Rawlsian "overlapping consensus"
  • But possible inefficient for individuals

14
ECtHR CJ EU
  • Bosphorus case
  • Predecessors (M Co v. Germany, Matthews)
  • The ECtHR develops a doctrine of presumption of
    compliance

15
Bosphorus
  • 155.  In the Court's view, State action taken in
    compliance with such legal obligations is
    justified as long as the relevant organisation is
    considered to protect fundamental rights, as
    regards both the substantive guarantees offered
    and the mechanisms controlling their observance,
    in a manner which can be considered at least
    equivalent to that for which the Convention
    provides (). By equivalent the Court means
    comparable any requirement that the
    organisation's protection be identical could
    run counter to the interest of international
    cooperation pursued (). However, any such
    finding of equivalence could not be final and
    would be susceptible to review in the light of
    any relevant change in fundamental rights
    protection.

16
Bosporus 2
  • 156.  If such equivalent protection is considered
    to be provided by the organisation, the
    presumption will be that a State has not departed
    from the requirements of the Convention when it
    does no more than implement legal obligations
    flowing from its membership of the organisation.
  • However, any such presumption can be rebutted if,
    in the circumstances of a particular case, it is
    considered that the protection of Convention
    rights was manifestly deficient. In such cases,
    the interest of international cooperation would
    be outweighed by the Convention's role as a
    constitutional instrument of European public
    order in the field of human rights ().

17
BVerfGE - CJEU
  • 1974 Solange I. (as long as)
  • 1979 Vielleicht-Beschluss (The may-be decision)
  • 1986 Solange II. (180 degree turn)
  • 1993 Maastricht (clarification)
  • 1994 Bananas (only application)
  • 2005 Arrest Warrant (did not turn on fundamental
    rights review)
  • 2009 Lisbon (did not turn on fundamental rights
    review)

18
Solange I.
  • The BVerfGE retains control
  • solange der Integrationsprozess der Gemeinschaft
    nicht so weit fortgeschritten ist, dass das
    Gemeinschaftsrecht auch einen von einem Parlament
    beschlossenen und in Geltung stehenden Katalog
    von Grundrechten enthält, der dem
    Grundrechtskatalog der deutschen Verfassung bis
    ins Detail adäquat ist.

19
Solange II.
  • Solange die EG, insbesondere die Rechtsprechung
    des Gerichtshofs der Gemeinschaften, einen
    wirksamen Schutz der Grundrechte gegenüber der
    Hoheitsgewalt der Gemeinschaften generell
    gewährleisten, der dem vom Grundgesetz als
    unabdingbar gebotenen Grundrechtsschutz im
    wesentlichen gleichzuachten ist, zumal den
    Wesensgehalt der Grundrechte generell verbürgt,
    wird das Bundesverfassungsgericht seine
    Gerichtsbarkeit über die Anwendbarkeit von
    abgeleitetem Gemeinschaftsrecht, das als
    Rechtsgrundlage für ein Verhalten deutscher
    Gerichte oder Behörden ... in Anspruch genommen
    wird, nicht mehr ausüben und dieses Recht mithin
    nicht mehr am Maßstab der Grundrechte des
    Grundgesetzes überprüfen.

20
Maastricht
  • Das Bundesverfassungsgericht übt seine
    Rechtsprechung über die Anwendbarkeit von
    abgeleitetem Gemeinschaftsrecht in Deutschland in
    einem Kooperationsverhältnis zum EuGH aus, indem
    der Europäische Gerichtshof den Grundrechtschutz
    in jedem Einzelfall für das gesamte Gebiet der
    Europäischen Gemeinschaft garantiert, das
    Bundesverfassungsgericht sich deshalb auf eine
    generelle Gewährleistung der unabdingbaren
    Grundrechtsstandards beschränken kann.

21
Bananenmarktverordnungentscheidung
  • Verfassungsbeschwerden und Vorlagen von
    Gerichten, die eine Verletzung von Grundrechten
    des Grundgesetzes durch sekundäres
    Gemeinschaftsrecht geltend machen, sind von
    vornherein unzulässig, wenn ihre Begründung nicht
    darlegt, dass die europäische Rechtsentwicklung
    einschließlich der Rechtsprechung des EuGH nach
    Ergehen der Solange II-Entscheidung ... unter
    den erforderlichen Grundrechtsstandard abgesunken
    sei. Deshalb muss die Begründung der Vorlage
    oder einer Verfassungsbeschwerde im Einzelnen
    darlegen, dass der jeweils als unabdingbar
    gebotene Grundrechtsschutz generell nicht
    gewährleistet ist.

22
Control and trust
  • What are the important issues in these judgments?
  • Finding of deficiency (Solange I.)
  • Presumption when does control kick in?
  • Bosphorus presumption of equivalent protection
    exists it can be rebutted in an individual case
    BUT a manifest deficiency is required
  • BVerfGE presumption of equivalence essential
    content and equal regard but can be rebutted
    by proof that the general level sank below
    required standard (indispensable level)
  • Individual protection vs. general protection
  • Seriousness of deficiency
  • Required level (floor?)
  • Increase in burden of proof for claimants
  • Requirement of substantive guarantee as well as
    enforcement mechanism
  • Temporariness of any presumption

23
Control and trust 2
  • Direct review or indirect review
  • EU acts directly (Bananas)
  • As implemented by a member state (Bosphorus)

24
Three main questions
  • Forum (Who decides?)
  • Standard (Against whose and what standard?)
  • Object (What do you review anyway?)

25
Kadi
  • Similar in that it concerns the relationship
    between two legal orders (their relationship and
    hierarchy), questions of forum, standard and
    object of inquiry
  • Different in that there was no judicial structure
    available for the case (while all the above cases
    had a supremacy/competence element here it comes
    to the fore, as an institutional counterpart in
    international law is missing)

26
Kadi - General Court (CFI)
  • EC had no autonomous discretion in implementing
    the UN SC Resolution
  • A review of EC measure implementing SC Resolution
    would amount to its indirect review and is in
    principle precluded
  • Exception is a review of alleged breaches of ius
    cogens of the UN SC Resolution (international
    standard)
  • It accepts the gap in judicial protection
  • It reviewed inhuman or degrading treatment,
    property rights and due process and found no
    breach
  • It accepts the supremacy (primacy) of
    international law over EU law

27
Kadis appeal argumenation
  • So long as the United Nations do not provide a
    mechanism of independent judicial review that
    guarantees compliance with fundamental rights of
    decisions taken by the Security Council and the
    Sanctions Committee, the Community Courts should
    review measures adopted by the Community
    institutions with a view to implementing those
    decisions for their conformity with fundamental
    rights as recognised in the Community legal order
    (citing Bosphorus)
  • (as summarised by AG Maduro)

28
Kadi - AG
  • Concentrates on the regulation only
  • EC is an autonomous legal order
  • in the final analysis, the Community Courts
    determine the effect of international obligations
    within the Community legal order by reference to
    conditions set by Community law
  • The Court seeks, first and foremost, to preserve
    the constitutional framework created by the
    Treaty
  • Is there any basis in the Treaty for holding
    that the contested regulation is exempt from the
    constitutional constraints normally imposed by
    Community law, since it implements a sanctions
    regime imposed by Security Council resolutions?
    NO

29
Kadi AG 2
  • What should the intensity of review be
    (standard)?
  • UK less stringent criteria
  • Maduro disagrees (highlights the security vs.
    liberty debate and the political vs. legal
    debate)
  • Suggests the CJ find a breach of the right to be
    heard, the right to judicial review, and the
    right to property

30
Kadi - CJEU
  • Direct review is impossible
  • Full indirect review
  • The Community is based on the rule of law,
    inasmuch as neither its Member States nor its
    institutions can avoid review of the conformity
    of their acts with the basic constitutional
    charter, the EC Treaty, which established a
    complete system of legal remedies and procedures
    designed to enable the Court of Justice to review
    the legality of acts of the institutions . . . .
    It is also to be recalled that an international
    agreement cannot affect the allocation of powers
    fixed by the Treaties or, consequently, the
    autonomy of the Community legal system,
    observance of which is ensured by the Court by
    virtue of the exclusive jurisdiction conferred on
    it by Article 220 EC, jurisdiction that the Court
    has, moreover, already held to form part of the
    very foundations of the Community

31
Kadi CJEU 2
  • Criticizes the immunity from jurisdiction a
    lack of EU level review would cause
  • 326    It follows from the foregoing that the
    Community judicature must, in accordance with the
    powers conferred on it by the EC Treaty, ensure
    the review, in principle the full review, of the
    lawfulness of all Community acts in the light of
    the fundamental rights forming an integral part
    of the general principles of Community law,
    including review of Community measures which,
    like the contested regulation, are designed to
    give effect to the resolutions adopted by the
    Security Council under Chapter VII of the Charter
    of the United Nations.
  • Follows Maduro in result as well as reasoning

32
Three questions
  • Forum (Who decides?)
  • CFI - it considered its jurisdiction structurally
    impossible and considered lack of alternative
    unproblematic
  • AG CJEU EU level jurisdiction BUT only for EU
    level acts
  • Standard (Against whose and what standard?)
  • CFI the standard should be international ius
    cogens
  • AG CJEU the standard is EU fundamental rights
    in full intensity
  • Object (What do you review anyway?)
  • CFI the Security Council resolution
  • AG CJEU only Community measures

33
Parallels between Bosphorus, Solange and Kadi?
  • Yes, BUT the Kadi model is not based on
    presumptions, because there is no judicial
    protection to speak of at international level,
    its more a question of relationship between
    legal orders than of levels of protection
    guaranteed by courts
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com